Agreed, but if memory is correct that's why iit was done, as an incentive to keep mages alive in the early stages of the game. Besides, a puny mage can only carry so much stuff before stat gain.
Cure wounds too strong
Collapse
X
-
It's a different regime when you can use it for endurance.Comment
-
It's a single phase door in a maze of twisty passages. And it doesn't always take 4 turns. It takes only 1 to sustain fighting strength (~500HP) for a strong character in a battle of attrition. That's the real advantage of Paladins--not being able to heal in a single fight, which anyone can do with enough !CCW, but being able to fight effectively indefinitely against endless waves of monsters.
If you want it to scale, give it maybe 50 HP max, or make it use mana proportional to HP recovered. (Less than 10 casts total.)
It does not sound like it applies to mages, last time I killed M I had 730hp max that means *CLW would get me out of one-shot if I had between ca. 530 and 556 hp.
Maybe the solution would be to remove CLW from the rogue list and increase that mana cost for rangers.
If you want to build a ranger/mage for this paladin style fighting you have to carry lots of +Con items. I think you have earned that good *CLW then.My Angband videos : http://www.youtube.com/view_play_lis...385E85F31166B2Comment
-
Your problems sounds like it is more rogue specific.
It does not sound like it applies to mages, last time I killed M I had 730hp max that means *CLW would get me out of one-shot if I had between ca. 530 and 556 hp.
Maybe the solution would be to remove CLW from the rogue list and increase that mana cost for rangers.
If you want to build a ranger/mage for this paladin style fighting you have to carry lots of +Con items. I think you have earned that good *CLW then.Comment
-
"Been away so long I hardly knew the place, gee it's good to be back home" - The BeatlesComment
-
I think it will make rogues more difficult, but not substantially so. Rogues are already basically fighters with some magical tricks in exchange for a bit less combat prowess. Makes sense to remove an abusively effective (and dirt cheap) means of healing reliably.Comment
-
rogues won't be unplayable, but it will hurt them noticeably, and further shift balance of power to the ranger, an already overpowered class. personally i don't particularly see the problem with CLW as is - i think a rogue should be able steal away for a few turns to patch themselves up. even with a fair amount of hit points, it's not really enough to combat attrition against the more deadly opponents. certainly not game-breakingly overpowered compared to a lot of options other classes have at their disposal...
anyway if this change does go through, maybe to compensate, reduce the levels at which rogues get phase door, teleport self, and ID, as well as the reduce the failure rates and perhaps costs? i think that would be more thematically consistent, anyway...Comment
-
Honestly, I think ID should just have a zero failure rate for everyone. Doesn't affect much except making things go faster.Comment
-
In FA, I have replaced the CLW and Cure Poison spells with one that halves all cuts and poison and one which cures them completely; there is no actual healing spell for mages. This then (mostly) saves them from dying from cuts.One for the Dark Lord on his dark throne
In the Land of Mordor where the Shadows lie.Comment
-
By that time there's usually a Rod of IDor two; the spell is occasionally useful while the rod is charging. The mana cost, even for a rogue, is too high to ID everything without excessive resting. (Deep levels are dangerous enough without tons of awake monsters running around.)
And if you don't have a rod, just carry a huge stack of scrolls. Buying out the alchemist is cheap.
There's certainly no point to be looking for loot at that point. 100K gold (at least) is pretty much guaranteed.Comment
-
Even when ID is at 5% fail I generally don't use it much.
By that time there's usually a Rod of IDor two; the spell is occasionally useful while the rod is charging. The mana cost, even for a rogue, is too high to ID everything without excessive resting. (Deep levels are dangerous enough without tons of awake monsters running around.)
And if you don't have a rod, just carry a huge stack of scrolls. Buying out the alchemist is cheap.
There's certainly no point to be looking for loot at that point. 100K gold (at least) is pretty much guaranteed.
This becomes doubly important when playing with randarts, as it is harder to meta-guess what is or is not an artifact.
Making it 0% fail is really not unreasonable IMHO. Those who are obsessed with ultra-low turncount will not use it because of the mana cost, even at 0%. The rest of us are spared the boredom of sleeping in vaults while we wait to finish IDing everything we found.Comment
-
*snip* personally i don't particularly see the problem with CLW as is - i think a rogue should be able steal away for a few turns to patch themselves up. even with a fair amount of hit points, it's not really enough to combat attrition against the more deadly opponents.Comment
-
rogues won't be unplayable, but it will hurt them noticeably, and further shift balance of power to the ranger, an already overpowered class. personally i don't particularly see the problem with CLW as is - i think a rogue should be able steal away for a few turns to patch themselves up. even with a fair amount of hit points, it's not really enough to combat attrition against the more deadly opponents. certainly not game-breakingly overpowered compared to a lot of options other classes have at their disposal...
anyway if this change does go through, maybe to compensate, reduce the levels at which rogues get phase door, teleport self, and ID, as well as the reduce the failure rates and perhaps costs? i think that would be more thematically consistent, anyway..."Been away so long I hardly knew the place, gee it's good to be back home" - The BeatlesComment
-
I use the identify spell obsessively once I've got a decent fail rate and a bit of mana. It lets me find artifacts far far faster than waiting for pseudo-ID to kick in. I can't imagine clearing out a pit or vault and *not* ID-spamming every object on the floor.
This becomes doubly important when playing with randarts, as it is harder to meta-guess what is or is not an artifact.
Making it 0% fail is really not unreasonable IMHO. Those who are obsessed with ultra-low turncount will not use it because of the mana cost, even at 0%. The rest of us are spared the boredom of sleeping in vaults while we wait to finish IDing everything we found.
There's a very very easy way to test for randarts: destroy stuff. Anything indestructible is an artifact. If you're not up for destroying stuff because it might be Elvenkind (or something), then wield it: anything important is instantly tagged {splendid}. Between a one-turn wield and a one-turn destroy, you can sort through loot far faster (and with less boredom) than waiting to ID it all.
Don't destroy boots, btw - always wield them first. Unless you're already wearing BoS+10."Been away so long I hardly knew the place, gee it's good to be back home" - The BeatlesComment
Comment